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Jusqu'au plus profond des Astres
A.J. Twice
snowseau wrote a review...
Some of these stories were misses for me, but my favourite was "The Murder of Santa Claus." For a short story, I found it very elaborate and reminiscent of Murder on the Orient Express. I also enjoyed "The Girl Who Loved Graveyards" even though I found it more sad than mysterious.
snowseau started reading...

Sleep No More: Six Murderous Tales
P.D. James
snowseau commented on a post
âRight, nice conspiracy youâve concocted. Youâre still a murderer!â - Fatma el-Shaâarawi
đ€
âCool motive, still murder.â - Jake Peralta
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Spring 2026 Readalong
Read at least 1 book in the Spring 2026 Readalong.
snowseau wrote a review...
This book was beautifully written, but I found that the characters lacked the depth I would have expected from it. Constanta spent so long with the others, yet it feels like I barely know any of them aside from her. Perhaps she didn't feel the need to go into too much detail about them in her letters, but as a reader, it felt lacking.
snowseau started reading...

A Dowry of Blood (A Dowry of Blood, #1)
S.T. Gibson
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Letâs round up pancake month 2026!
What was your February: âą favourite books: âą least favourite books: âą total books read:
For March: âą What are you planning to read ? âą Are there any books releasing you're interested in? âą do you have a reading goal for the month?
Bonus Questions for March: âą Favourite Spring-Related Book?
âą Favourite St Davidâs Day Tradition? (Also, could do favourite Welsh food or book, etc. or maybe something youâre to try or read! )
âą Favourite St Patrickâs Day Tradition? (Also, could do favourite Irish food or book, etc. or maybe something youâre curious to try or read!)
âą Book recommendations for (good or bad) relationships/stories with mothers or mother figures (itâs Motherâs Day month in the UK, I know in the US itâs May)
snowseau is interested in reading...

Daughter of Crows
Mark Lawrence
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The Library of Amorlin
Kalyn Josephson
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Lady Tremaine
Rachel Hochhauser
snowseau TBR'd a book

A Dowry of Blood (A Dowry of Blood, #1)
S.T. Gibson
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Running Close to the Wind
Alexandra Rowland
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snowseau finished a book

The Phone Booth at the Edge of the World
Laura Imai Messina
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
With the use of emojis on our reviews, I wanted to kind of just ask a weird question, especially after seeing the theater masks being the featured emoji a minute ago. PB also kind of encourages emojis when we discover books / review books. When I read reviews on here I use my accessibility reader and my phones accessibility reader reads emojis as their proper name. Like take:
đ is spoken as âTheater masks representing the performance arts.â đïžâđšïž is spoken as âEye in a speech bubble representing the anti bullying campaign.â
But Iâve used đ to represent masking, and đïžâđšïž to represent a curse, because thatâs how I interpret the emoji visually.
Like take đ since its formal name is âwind chimeâ people can take it as face value, but I interpret it as summer / windy days. And how đđŒ is usually seen as praying hands but itâs most common use is two people high fiving.
So I just wanted to ask if anyone has used emojis that usually mean one thing, but because it reminds you of something else, you use it a different way? Or if youâve used an emoji to find out later it has a different meaning? And if youâve used seemingly simple emojis that actually have a deeper meaning than its emoji suggests.
Post from the The Phone Booth at the Edge of the World forum
snowseau wrote a review...
This story was appalling, I loved it. Camille spouted so much misogynistic crap that she grew up with and hears from her husband and online "friends." I actually felt bad for her, which says a lot about Schaefer's writing. I was not happy about a single thing that happened in this book, but that made it all the better.
snowseau finished a book

Trad Wife: A Novel
Saratoga Schaefer
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I knew I would love this book, but it still surpassed my expectations. Fawcett's writing style is superb, and her characterization of the cats was so spot-on. It was very reminiscent of Howl's Moving Castle (which I will never complain about), and it felt like a warm hug.